Different Situations (different + situation)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Cardiac Arrhythmias Triggered by Sudden and Dynamic Efforts

ANNALS OF NONINVASIVE ELECTROCARDIOLOGY, Issue 2 2010
Emanuel C. Furtado M.D.
Background: Some arrhythmias are triggered only during exercise. The aim of this study is to describe the frequency and type of arrhythmia induced by a standardized protocol of sudden and dynamic exercise, which tends to reflect routine situations of efforts (e.g., climbing stairs), and compare with those found on maximal cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET). Methods: A total of 2329 subjects (1594 men) aged 9,91 years (mean 52 years, SD ± 16) were submitted to a standardized protocol of sudden and dynamic exercise (4-second exercise test [4sET]) prior to a CPET. A continuous digital electrocardiogram (ECG) was recorded during 4sET and CPET, and later reviewed and interpreted by the same physician (who supervised all the procedures). Results: A total of 1125 subjects (43%) had cardiac arrhythmias during one or both procedures. About 57% of the arrhythmias were supraventricular, but 47 subjects (2% of all subjects) presented more complex arrhythmias including 43 cases of nonsustained supraventricular tachycardia and four nonsustained ventricular tachycardia. While arrhythmias were more often exposed by the CPET (P < 0.01), in 221 cases (10% of the total sample) of arrhythmias they were only induced by 4sET; these included four cases of nonsustained supraventricular tachycardia. Conclusion: 4sET-induced arrhythmias tend to be simple and were always short-lasting. In some cases, ECG recording during 4sET showed arrhythmias that would not be induced by a progressive maximal exercise test. Different situations of exercise, sudden and short versus maximal and progressive, tend to generate different arrhythmic responses and possibly complementary clinical implications. Ann Noninvasive Electrocardiol 2010;15(2):151,156 [source]


The relationship between NGOS and businesses in the public arena: An empirical analysis for Spain

JOURNAL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS, Issue 1 2009
Carmen Valor
At the beginning of this century, corporate social responsibility was included in the public agenda. In certain countries, policy-making takes place in semi-public forums, in which NGOs are asked to participate. However, a different situation may be found in other countries. This paper analyses the relationship between businesses and NGOs in the public arena in Spain. By applying grounded theory, the authors summarize this relationship in the dynamics of approach-withdrawal. Firms have pushed to withdraw Advocacy NGOs from public forums, whose main purpose was policy-making. The explicit argument to justify this collective decision is the lack of foundational legitimacy of NGOs. Firms understand that these NGOs are not legitimized to be a counterbalancing force of corporations. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Meta-Analysis of Diagnostic Test Accuracy Studies with Multiple Thresholds using Survival Methods

BIOMETRICAL JOURNAL, Issue 1 2010
H. Putter
Abstract Diagnostic tests play an important role in clinical practice. The objective of a diagnostic test accuracy study is to compare an experimental diagnostic test with a reference standard. The majority of these studies dichotomize test results into two categories: negative and positive. But often the underlying test results may be categorized into more than two, ordered, categories. This article concerns the situation where multiple studies have evaluated the same diagnostic test with the same multiple thresholds in a population of non-diseased and diseased individuals. Recently, bivariate meta-analysis has been proposed for the pooling of sensitivity and specificity, which are likely to be negatively correlated within studies. These ideas have been extended to the situation of diagnostic tests with multiple thresholds, leading to a multinomial model with multivariate normal between-study variation. This approach is efficient, but computer-intensive and its convergence is highly dependent on starting values. Moreover, monotonicity of the sensitivities/specificities for increasing thresholds is not guaranteed. Here, we propose a Poisson-correlated gamma frailty model, previously applied to a seemingly quite different situation, meta-analysis of paired survival curves. Since the approach is based on hazards, it guarantees monotonicity of the sensitivities/specificities for increasing thresholds. The approach is less efficient than the multinomial/normal approach. On the other hand, the Poisson-correlated gamma frailty model makes no assumptions on the relationship between sensitivity and specificity, gives consistent results, appears to be quite robust against different between-study variation models, and is computationally very fast and reliable with regard to the overall sensitivities/specificities. [source]


Negotiating Personal and Cultural Significance: A Theoretical Framework for Art Museum Education

CURATOR THE MUSEUM JOURNAL, Issue 4 2007
Olga M. Hubard
This article presents a theoretical framework for those who facilitate engagements with works of art. The aim is to help facilitators negotiate potential differences between the original meaning(s) of an artwork and the fresh interpretations spectators articulate. The author applies Umberto Eco's ideas about literary texts to instances of interpretation in the visual arts. Eco suggests that the implications of unexpected readings change in different situations. Therefore, the facilitators' challenge is in discovering how to handle each individual encounter. To this end, facilitators may wish to ponder: What meaning does the new interpretation conflict with? And what is the distance between the cultural conventions of spectators and the conventions that framed the creation of the work? Real world examples are used to shed light on these questions and their significance. [source]


VegTrack: A structured vegetation restoration activity database

ECOLOGICAL MANAGEMENT & RESTORATION, Issue 2 2009
Andre Zerger
Summary, Information about on-ground vegetation restoration activities (e.g. fencing and revegetation) is critical if natural resource management (NRM) groups are to monitor progress towards restoration targets, assess the efficacy of their interventions and adaptively learn from different actions. However, in Australia, there are few practical guidelines for recording data, making it difficult to consistently compare actions between sites and through time. Records of primary information are particularly important given the ongoing national investment in vegetation restoration activities. With the aid of six-case study areas in different landscapes, robust guidelines and tools were developed and incorporated into VegTrack, a methodology, which allows groups to develop their own vegetation restoration activity database. VegTrack differentiates spatial data from attribute data storing each in different databases (a GIS and a relational database management system respectively). We describe the process which enables NRM groups to develop their own database, and provide a Microsoft Access 2003 version of VegTrack to allow NRM groups to commence activity recording. To demonstrate the utility of the VegTrack method in different situations and to encourage consistency across study areas, we describe the application of the guidelines for several scenarios including riparian revegetation, corridors disrupted by roads and infill plantings. [source]


High-throughput screening of kinase inhibitors by multiplex capillary electrophoresis with UV absorption detection

ELECTROPHORESIS, Issue 1-2 2003
Yan He
Abstract Protein kinases play a major role in the transformation of cells and are often used as molecular targets for the new generation of anticancer drugs. We present a novel technique for high-throughput screening of inhibitors of protein kinases. The technique involves the use of multiplexed capillary electrophoresis (CE) for the rapid separation of the peptides, phosphopeptides, and various inhibitors. By means of UV detection, diversified peptides with native amino acid sequences and their phosphorylated counterparts can be directly analyzed without the need for radioactive or fluorescence labeling. The effects of different inhibitors and their IC50 value were determined using three different situations involving the use of a single purified kinase, two purified kinases, and crude cell extracts, respectively. The results suggest that multiplexed CE/UV may prove to be a straightforward and general approach for high-throughput screening of compound libraries to find potent and selective inhibitors of the various protein kinases. [source]


Analysis of genetic influences on the consistency and variability of the Big Five across different stressful situations

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY, Issue 5 2001
Gerty Lensvelt-Mulders
Several studies have demonstrated that individual differences in personality traits, known as the Big Five, have a genetic component. These personality traits are considered important predictors of everyday behaviour. In addition to personality traits there are also factors in the environment that govern behaviour. This dual influence on behaviour is statistically reflected in a P,×,S interaction. This study examines the genetic and environmental influences on the interactions between a person and his daily life environment for the Big Five. Fifty-seven identical twin pairs and 43 fraternal twin pairs participated in this study. Trait related behaviour was measured in 30 different situations with the aid of an SR inventory. The heritability coefficients for the main effect of P were in the normal range, varying between 0.35 for Agreeableness and 0.53 for Conscientiousness. The heritability coefficients for the P,×,S interactions were moderately high, explaining between 26% and 69% of the total P,×,S variance. The consequences of these results for general and behavioural genetic research on the Big Five will be discussed. Copyright © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Output of the Spanish Cortes (1979,2000): A case of adaptation to party government

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL RESEARCH, Issue 4 2006
MANUEL SANCHEZ DE DIOS
It mainly examines the output of the lower chamber due to the asymmetrical bicameralism and weak status of the Senate. In Spain, the legislative output has been dependent on different situations of party government. In general terms, the Cortes have been always very active in controlling the executive and its participation in law-making was highly relevant when there was a minority government. Because parties are central actors in parliament and due to the strong party discipline in the Spanish case, the author mainly studied parliament output from the viewpoint of strategies of opposition parties. Sometimes parties behaved in parliament procedures in a competitive way, while in others they behave cooperatively. There was a great variety of patterns of strategic behaviour on account of the different situations of party government and the diverse opposition parties. Half of the parliaments had minority governments in which minority parties played a very important role by supporting the government in parliament; however, the main opposition party was never the same since there were two changes of government. [source]


The use of Afrocentric features as cues for judgment in the presence of diagnostic information

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 1 2005
Irene V. Blair
Prior research has shown that within racial category, group members with more Afrocentric facial features are presumed to have more stereotypic traits than those with less Afrocentric features. The present experiment investigated whether this form of feature-based stereotyping occurs when more diagnostic information is available. The participants were provided with photographs and information about the aggressive (or non-aggressive) behaviour of 64 African Americans in four different situations, and asked to predict the likelihood of aggression in a fifth situation. As expected, each instance of aggression increased estimates that a target would behave aggressively in the unknown situation. With degree of displayed aggression controlled, however, targets with more Afrocentric features were judged as significantly more likely to behave aggressively than targets with less Afrocentric features. Thus, stereotyping based on Afrocentric features occurs even when other obviously-relevant information is available. This suggests that it may be difficult to detect and avoid. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Formation of 2,4,D complexes on montmorillonites , an ab initio molecular dynamics study

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, Issue 3 2007
D. Tunega
Summary Sorption of the anionic form of the pesticide 2,4,D (2,4,dichlorophenoxyacetic acid) on the surface of the clay mineral montmorillonite was investigated using a short-time ab initio molecular dynamics (MD) simulation at room temperature. Three different situations were modelled: sorption on a dry surface, on a hydrated surface and an intercalation between montmorillonite layers. In all three cases, the calcium cation compensates the excess negative charge of the montmorillonite layer and the negative charge of the 2,4,D anion. It was found that in all models with direct contact of the Ca2+ cation with the montmorillonite layer, the most stable position of Ca2+ is above the ditrigonal hole of the mineral layer. While in the case of a dry surface very stable bidentate binding is created between the 2,4,D anion and the Ca2+ cation, the formation of the monodentate complexes is preferred in all models that include water molecules. Hydrogen bonds formed between water molecules and the 2,4,D anion make a considerable contribution to the formation of the monodentate complexes. Tetrahedral substitutions in the montmorillonite layer have a significant effect on the formation of the complexes of any type. However, the MD simulations did not support the role of Ca2+ as a cation bridge in the adsorption mechanism. Calculations showed that hydrated 2,4,D···Ca2+ complexes are thermodynamically more stable than complexes in which the Ca2+ cation acts as a bridge to the surface. On the other hand, it is possible that phyllosilicates with a greater concentration of isomorphic substitutions (e.g. mica) will be able to form stable surface complexes with a cation bridge mechanism. [source]


Classifying tagging experiments for commercial fisheries into three fundamental types based on design, data requirements and estimable population parameters

FISH AND FISHERIES, Issue 2 2010
Tom Polacheck
Abstract Mark,recapture experiments have the potential to provide direct estimates of fundamental parameters required for fishery stock assessment and provision of subsequent management advice in fisheries. The literature on mark,recapture experiments is enormous, with a variety of different experimental designs and estimation models; thus, it can be difficult to grasp the primary features of different approaches, the inter-relationship among them and their potential utility in different situations. Here, we present an overview of the tagging experimental designs that are appropriate for use in commercial fishery situations. We suggest that most mark,recapture experiments in a large-scale fishery context can be classified into one of three basic types , Petersen, tag-attrition or Brownie , based on the fundamental design employed for releases and recaptures. The release and recapture strategy (e.g. the number of release events, whether the size of the sample examined for recaptured tags is known) determines which parameters can be estimated and from where the information for estimating them arises. We conclude that an integrated Brownie and Petersen approach is the most powerful of the different approaches in terms of the range of parameters that can be estimated without underlying assumptions or constraints on parameters. Such an approach can provide direct estimates of fishing mortality, natural mortality and population size, which are the main population dynamics parameters that traditional fishery stock assessments attempt to estimate. [source]


Species-specific responses of planktivorous fish to the introduction of a new piscivore: implications for prey fitness

FRESHWATER BIOLOGY, Issue 9 2007
FRANZ HÖLKER
Summary 1. Antipredator behaviour by the facultative planktivorous fish species roach (Rutilus rutilus), perch (Perca fluviatilis) and rudd (Scardinius erythrophthalmus) was studied in a multi-year whole-lake experiment to evaluate species-specific behavioural and numerical responses to the stocking of pikeperch (Sander lucioperca), a predator with different foraging behaviour than the resident predators large perch (P. fluviatilis) and pike (Esox lucius). 2. Behavioural responses to pikeperch varied greatly during the night, ranging from reduced activity (roach and small perch) and a shift in habitat (roach), to no change in the habitat use and activity of rudd. The differing responses of the different planktivorous prey species highlight the potential variation in behavioural response to predation risk from species of similar vulnerability. 3. These differences had profound effects on fitness; the density of species that exhibited an antipredator response declined only slightly (roach) or even increased (small perch), whereas the density of the species that did not exhibit an antipredator response (rudd) decreased dramatically (by more than 80%). 4. The maladaptive behaviour of rudd can be explained by a ,behavioural syndrome', i.e. the interdependence of behaviours expressed in different contexts (feeding activity, antipredator) across different situations (different densities of predators). 5. Our study extends previous studies, that have typically been limited to more controlled situations, by illustrating the variability in intensity of phenotypic responses to predators, and the consequences for population density, in a large whole-lake setting. [source]


Diagnosis of Helicobacter pylori Infection

HELICOBACTER, Issue 2005
Karen A. Krogfelt
ABSTRACT A large number of studies on diagnostic tests have been published this year. New tests were proposed for the detection of Helicobacter pylori antigens in stools and new molecular methods (real-time polymerase chain reaction) to look for antimicrobial susceptibility. The other standard tests have been applied in different situations to improve the diagnosis of the infection. [source]


Improved GMM with parameter initialization for unsupervised adaptation of Brain,Computer interface

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL METHODS IN BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, Issue 6 2010
Guangquan Liu
Abstract An important property of brain signals is their nonstationarity. How to adapt a brain,computer interface (BCI) to the changing brain states is one of the challenges faced by BCI researchers, especially in real application where the subject's real intent is unknown to the system. Gaussian mixture model (GMM) has been used for the unsupervised adaptation of the classifier in BCI. In this paper, a method of initializing the model parameters is proposed for expectation maximization-based GMM parameter estimation. This improved GMM method and other two existing unsupervised adaptation methods are applied to groups of constructed artificial data with different data properties. Performances of these methods in different situations are analyzed. Compared with the other two unsupervised adaptation methods, this method shows a better ability of adapting to changes and discovering class information from unlabelled data. The methods are also applied to real EEG data recorded in 19 experiments. For real data, the proposed method achieves an error rate significantly lower than the other two unsupervised methods. Results of the real data agree with the analysis based on the artificial data, which confirms not only the effectiveness of our method but also the validity of the constructed data. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Video tracking system optimization using evolution strategies

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF IMAGING SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGY, Issue 2 2007
Jesús García
Abstract A video-based tracking system for airport surveillance, composed by modules performing vision tasks at different levels, is adapted for operational conditions by means of Evolution Strategies (ES). An optimization procedure has been carried out considering different scenes composed of representative trajectories, supported by a global evaluation metric proposed to quantify the system performance. The generalization problem (the search of appropriate solutions for general situations, avoiding over-adaptation to particular conditions) is approached considering evaluation of ES-individuals over combinations of trajectories to build the fitness function. In this way, the optimization procedure covers sets of trajectories representing different types of problems. Besides, alternative operators for aggregating partial evaluations have been analysed. Results show how the optimization strategy provides a sensitive tuning of performance related to input parameters at different levels, and how the combination of different situations improves the generalization capability of the trained system. The global performance final system after optimization is also compared with representative algorithms in the state of the art of visual tracking. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Imaging Syst Technol, 17, 75,90, 2007 [source]


On the role of context in hierarchical fuzzy controllers

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS, Issue 5 2002
Luis Magdalena
This article analyzes the role of context in hierarchical fuzzy controllers based on the decomposition of the input space. The usual consideration in most hierarchical fuzzy systems is the reduction of dimensionality problems. This article will analyze how to profit from the qualities of context as a key question in the definition of a fuzzy controller, to reduce the design efforts by making it easier to introduce the expert knowledge in that process. The idea is to use the output of a level of the hierarchy as the method to define (or adjust) the normalization functions (considered as contextual information) applied to the variables of the following level of that hierarchy. Two different situations will be analyzed, including an application example for each case. In the first case the decomposition will affect variables placed at the same level of description (abstraction) regarding the problem to be solved. In the second case, the decomposition process works on variables placed at different levels of description of the problem (descriptions with a different level of abstraction). © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


Two-dimensional hydrogen atom confined in circles, angles, and circular sectors

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUANTUM CHEMISTRY, Issue 4 2005
L. Chaos-Cador
Abstract The Schrödinger equation for the 2D hydrogen atom is separable in circular coordinates (, = , , = tan,1y/x). In this article the energy eigenvalues and eigenfunctions of such an atom in three different situations of confinement inside (a) a circle (0 , , , ,0, 0 , , , 2,), (b) an angle (0 , , , ,, 0 , , , ,0), and (c) a circular sector (0 , , , ,0, 0 , , , ,0) are explicitly constructed. Characteristic properties of the atom in its ground state for each situation of confinement such as the polarizability for (a) and electric dipole moment for (b) and (c) are also evaluated. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Quantum Chem, 2005 [source]


Mechanisms of Transition Between Double Paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardias

JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY, Issue 12 2001
JEN-YUAN KUO M.D.
Double Paroxysmal Supraventricular Tachycardias. Introduction: Coexistence of double tachycardias in one patient has been infrequently reported. Furthermore, the mechanisms of transition between double paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardias have not been well studied. Methods and Results: Thirty-five patients with two paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardias were studied. Group IA consisted of 3 patients with spontaneous transition between AV reciprocating tachycardia (AVRT) and AV nodal reentrant tachycardia (AVNRT). Group IB consisted of 13 patients without spontaneous transition between AVRT and AVNRT. Group IIA consisted of 5 patients with spontaneous transition between AVNRT and atrial tachycardia (AT). Group IIB consisted of 14 patients without spontaneous transition between AVNRT and AT. The absolute values of differences between the two tachycardia cycle lengths were significantly smaller in patients with than in those without transition between the two tachycardias (25 ± 8 msec vs 90 ± 46 msec, P < 0.05, IA vs IB; 21 ± 25 msec vs 99 ± 57 msec, P < 0.01, IIA vs IIB). The cutoff point of 25 msec had 80% positive predictive value for transition between the two tachycardias. Transition between two tachycardias occurred due to a spontaneous premature atrial complex (30%), conduction block at one limb of tachycardia (20%), or tachycardiainduced tachycardia (50%). Absence of transition between two tachycardias might be explained by the absence of a spontaneous premature atrial complex, longer cycle length of the first tachycardia, larger difference between two tachycardia cycle lengths, or induction of each tachycardia under different situations. Conclusion: Double supraventricular tachycardias with similar tachycardia cycle lengths are vulnerable to transition between different tachycardias. [source]


Effects of ultrasound on culture of Aspergillus terreus

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY & BIOTECHNOLOGY, Issue 5 2008
Nuria Sainz Herrán
Abstract BACKGROUND: Fermentations of Aspergillus terreus are commercially used to produce lovastatin. How ultrasound might influence this fermentation is unknown. While high-intensity ultrasound is effective in disrupting microbial cells, ultrasound of low intensity is known to improve productivity of some fermentation processes without damaging cells. Mechanisms behind productivity improvements have not been clearly identified in earlier studies. This work reports on the effects of ultrasound on A. terreus fermentation for low (957 W m,3), medium (2870 W m,3) and high (4783 W m,3) values of sonication power input in a slurry bubble column sonobioreactor. RESULTS: Sonication at any power level did not affect biomass growth profiles in comparison with negative controls. In contrast, medium- and high-intensity sonication greatly reduced production of lovastatin and substantially altered the growth morphology. At medium and high intensity, ultrasound disrupted fungal pellets and caused the biomass to grow mainly as dispersed hyphae. Sonication affected broth rheology because rheology depends on the morphology of the suspended biomass. CONCLUSION: Sonication can be used to modify growth morphology and broth rheology without affecting growth of filamentous fungi. Sonication appears to influence the primary growth metabolism and secondary metabolism differently in different situations. Copyright © 2008 Society of Chemical Industry [source]


Changes in professional conceptions of suicide prevention among psychologists: using a conceptual model

JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY & APPLIED SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 2 2002
Maila Upanne
Abstract This prospective follow-up study monitored the evolution of psychologists' conceptions of suicide prevention over the course of their participation in psychological autopsy studies that constituted the first phase of the National Suicide Prevention Project in Finland. Another purpose of the study was to consider the feasibility of an earlier suicide prevention model. Ideas on prevention were compared in two different situations and items were categorized using descriptive and conceptual criteria of prevention. They could be classified into a typology of four categories: care approach, cultural-educational approach, conditions approach, and critical approach. The follow-up suggested that the model is a feasible method for analysing conceptions of suicide prevention, and that it was possible to interpret conceptions in a theoretically adequate manner. In addition, ideas could be compared with certain known theoretical models of prevention. The model could thus be used in further research and for practical purposes. Experiences of psychological autopsy studies definitely had an impact on the psychologists' views; conceptions altered towards emphasizing the care approach and individual risk factors. Nonetheless, the overall structure of the prevention paradigm remained multifactorial, stressing multistage influencing. Surprisingly, the priority of acute suicide risk as a preventive target did not increase. Promotive aims remained the most important aim category. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


The visual compass: Performance and limitations of an appearance-based method

JOURNAL OF FIELD ROBOTICS (FORMERLY JOURNAL OF ROBOTIC SYSTEMS), Issue 10 2006
Frédéric Labrosse
In this article we present an algorithm to estimate the orientation of a robot relative to an orientation specified at the beginning of the process. This is done by computing the rotation of the robot between successive panoramic images, grabbed on the robot while it moves, using a subsymbolic method to match the images. The context of the work is simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM) in unstructured and unmodified environments. As such, very few assumptions are made about the environment and the robot's displacement. The algorithm's performance depends on the value of a number of parameters being determined to provide overall good performance of the system. The performance is evaluated in different situations (trajectories and environments) with the same parameters and the results show that the method performs adequately for its intended use. In particular, the error is shown to be drifting slowly, in fact much slower than unprocessed inertial sensors, thus only requiring infrequent realignment, for example, when relocalizing in a topological map. Limitations of the proposed methods are also shown and discussed. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


CORRELATION BETWEEN CITRIC ACID, THYMUS VULGARIS EXTRACT AND NaCl, AND HEAT SENSITIVITY AND CASEINASE PRODUCTION BY AEROMONAS CAVIAE AND A. SOBRIA

JOURNAL OF FOOD PROCESSING AND PRESERVATION, Issue 6 2008
BAYAN M. ABU-GHAZALEH
ABSTRACT The effects of citric acid, Thymus vulgaris extract and NaCl on the heat sensitivity of Aeromonas spp. were examined in three different situations in this study. First, the effects of pretreatment with nutrient broth plus 0.03% citric acid, nutrient broth plus 0.3% T. vulgaris extract, nutrient broth plus 2.5% NaCl or nutrient broth plus 3% NaCl on the survival and caseinase production by heated A. caviae 166 and A. sobria 74 were investigated. Pretreatment of Aeromonas spp. with these preservatives for 1 or 6 days significantly increased their resistance to subsequent heating at 54C. However, pretreatment of Aeromonas strains with nutrient broth plus 2.5% NaCl or nutrient broth plus 3% NaCl before heating at 54C significantly (P < 0.05) decreased the production of caseinase by the heated cells. Second, the effect of post-treatment with preservatives after heating of Aeromonas strains was examined. Post-treatment of Aeromonas strains with the tested preservatives for 7 days after heating at 54C for 20 min prevented a complete recovery of cells and decreased the caseinase production compared with Aeromonas cells that were incubated in nutrient broth alone for 7 days after heating at 54C. Third, the effect of the type of the heating menstruum on the heat sensitivity of Aeromonas strains was investigated in this study. Heating in NaCl (0.85%) containing citric acid (0.03%) was the most effective treatment in killing Aeromonas spp. Heating in NaCl (0.85%) containing T. vulgaris extract (0.3%) or in NaCl (3.85%) slightly increased the resistance of cells to heat. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS The results obtained in this study can be applied in the food industry, where combination of mild heat treatment and addition of low doses of chemical preservatives to food is nowadays frequently used. This study determined the heat sensitivity and caseinase production by A. caviae and A. sobria at three different conditions that may be encountered during processing of food industrially or at home. Firstly, the effect of pretreatment with some preservatives on the heat sensitivity and caseinase production by the tested Aeromonas. spp. was studied. Secondly, the effect of post-treatment with preservatives on growth and caseinase production by the heated (54C) Aeromonas cells was investigated. Thirdly, effect of presence of preservatives in the heating menstruum on the heat sensitivity of Aeromonas spp. was studied. [source]


Women, serious mental illness and recidivism: A gender-based analysis of recidivism risk for women with SMI released from prison

JOURNAL OF FORENSIC NURSING, Issue 1 2010
Kristin G. Cloyes PhD
Abstract Two groups now constitute the fastest growing segment of the U.S. prison population: women and persons with mental illness. Few large-scale studies have explored associations among serious mental illness (SMI), gender, and recidivism, or compared factors such as illness severity and clinical history as these construct notably different situations for incarcerated women and men. We report on our recent study comparing prison recidivism rates, severity of mental illness, and clinical history for women and men released from Utah State Prison 1998,2002. Implications: While women generally have better recidivism outcomes than men, we find that SMI related factors have a greater negative effect on the trajectories of women in this sample as compared with the men. This suggests that programs and policies focused on the SMI-specific risks and needs of women could significantly reduce prison recidivism and increase community tenure for this group, with far-reaching effects for families and communities. [source]


Building Material Flow Accounts in the United States

JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY, Issue 5-6 2008
A Case Study in Public Sector Innovation
Summary Building a national system of material flow accounts in the United States could be an important step toward natural resource sustainability. But the task will not be as simple as "If you build it, they will come." The key to understanding the status of and prospects for official material flow accounts in the United States is to see the picture from the point of view of public sector and environmental innovation generally, rather than from the point of view of building the details of the accounts themselves. A simple model of public sector innovation helps explain what is happening and what needs to happen to make further progress. The model used here has four principal elements: methods, organizational capacity, demand, and actual use. The details and sequence of these elements vary in different situations, but all four must be present for successful innovations. Although aspects of culture, innovation, and government bureaucracy differ from country to country, the basic model appears to be similar across borders, at least in countries belonging to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). Seen this way, recent events in the United States indicate that (1) there is significant potential for such accounts; (2) the United States is moving toward creating them, although not in a systematic manner, which means that the progression and eventual outcome are uncertain; and (3) there are ways for the research community to participate very positively in the public process. [source]


Undergraduate students' understanding of falling bodies in idealized and real-world situations

JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN SCIENCE TEACHING, Issue 6 2004
M. Veronica Cahyadi
This study investigates the understanding of 18 first-year undergraduate students when simultaneously presented with two contrasting dynamical situations: the idealized (without air resistance) and real-world cases of balls being dropped or thrown. Previous work has shown that getting students to recognize flaws in their mental models helps them develop their understanding. Our students were better able to answer correctly the problems in idealized cases than the problems in real-world cases. For the real-world cases, the students understood the impact of air resistance on the object's size better than the impact of air resistance on objects of the same size but different mass. In follow-up interviews, the students reported that using the two different situations in the same test did indeed encourage them to think more carefully. By recognizing the need to include air resistance, they activated their appropriate mental "resources" to deal with the situations. We conclude that using contrasting situations (i.e., with and without an idealization) is a useful teaching tool. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Res Sci Teach 41: 569,583, 2004 [source]


Normal and Lateral Deformation of Lyotropically Ordered Polymer Brush

MACROMOLECULAR THEORY AND SIMULATIONS, Issue 9 2006
Alexey A. Polotsky
Abstract Summary: Planar polymer brush formed by semirigid chains of freely jointed rigid segments and immersed into a solvent is considered. Brush collapse induced by deterioration of the solvent quality and its deformation by external normal or lateral force is studied. It is demonstrated that these three different situations can be described in the framework of the common approach. It is shown that the collapse is accompanied by liquid-crystalline (LC) ordering within the brush. The LC transition can be jump-like (the first order) or continuous, depending on the segment's aspect ratio and grafting density. Transition point is investigated in detail, the corresponding phase diagrams are calculated. It is shown that the phase diagrams of a normally deformed brush have different structures, with a narrow ,leg' in the good solvent region for sparsely grafted brush, with two coexistence regions and a triple point, in addition, for shorter segment length or without these features if the chains are densely grafted. For the laterally deformed brush, phase diagrams have similar structures with a critical point in the good solvent regime. Polymer brush subjected to deformation by normal (top) and lateral (bottom) external force. [source]


Impact of intraguild predation and lambda-cyhalothrin on predation efficacy of three acarophagous predators

PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE (FORMERLY: PESTICIDE SCIENCE), Issue 6 2005
Caroline Provost
Abstract This laboratory study reports the interaction of three predators found in commercial apple orchards in Quebec, Hyaliodes vitripennis (Say) (Hemiptera: Miridae), Harmonia axyridis Pallas (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) and Amblyseius fallacis (Garman) (Acarina: Phytoseiidae). First, intraguild predation between H vitripennis and the two other predators was characterized in the absence and presence of their extraguild prey, Tetranychus urticae Koch. The results showed an asymmetrical interaction in favour of the larger predator and the levels of intraguild predation were weak for the two predatory combinations. Presence of the phytophagous mite reduced the intensity of intraguild predation in the predatory combination of H axyridis and H vitripennis. Second, the effects of intraguild predation and the application of lambda-cyhalothrin on predation efficacy of the predators were evaluated. The application of the insecticide reduced prey consumption of H vitripennis and H axyridis but did not affect that of A fallacis. Combination of predators and an insecticide application resulted in two different situations depending on the species involved: a reduced predation efficacy for the combination of H vitripennis and H axyridis due to a knockdown effect caused by the insecticide, and no effect on T urticae consumption for H vitripennis and A fallacis. It is suggested that an integrated pest management program based on H vitripennis, A fallacis and lambda-cyhalothrin may be evaluated to repress phytophagous mites in Quebec orchards. Copyright © 2005 Society of Chemical Industry [source]


Optimal Price and Quantity of Refurbished Products

PRODUCTION AND OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT, Issue 3 2006
Jumpol Vorasayan
Many retail product returns can be refurbished and resold, typically at a reduced price. The price set for the refurbished products affects the demands for both new and refurbished products, while the refurbishment and resale activities incur costs. To maximize profit, a manufacturer in a competitive market must carefully choose the proportion of returned products to refurbish and their sale price. We model the sale, return, refurbishment, and resale processes in an open queueing network and formulate a mathematical program to find the optimal price and proportion to refurbish. Examination of the optimality conditions reveals the different situations in which it is optimal to refurbish none, some, or all of the returned products. Refurbishing operations may increase profit or may be required to relieve a manufacturing capacity bottleneck. A numerical study identifies characteristics of the new product market and refurbished products that encourage refurbishing and some situations in which small changes in the refurbishing cost and quality provoke large changes in the optimal policy. [source]


Complaining: A function of attitude, personality, and situation

PSYCHOLOGY & MARKETING, Issue 8 2009
John Thřgersen
The random nature of situations where an acquired product or service contains a defect or deficiency means that consumers usually have no experience of seeking redress (i.e., complaining), or their experience may be from totally different situations. Because of this, most people have not formed a clear attitude about how to behave in the specific situation and they may also be uncertain about social norms for proper behavior. Hence, their behavior is guided by more general traits and dispositions as well as by situation-specific factors, which are bound to exert a relatively strong influence on behavior. This study confirms that the likelihood that consumers will complain over defects and deficiencies depends a lot on the situation and specifically on the size of the loss due to the defect and deficiency. However, some individuals refrain from complaining even in serious cases. This study shows that the propensity to complain depends on the person's attitude toward complaining and on personality traits (inclination to become dissatisfied). The two latter variables reinforce one another. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]


Leaps of faith: Is forgiveness a useful concept?

THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOANALYSIS, Issue 5 2008
Henry F. Smith
Using detailed clinical vignettes, the author argues that, despite the current idealization of the concept of forgiveness, the term has no place in psychoanalytic work, and there are some hazards to giving it one. Clinically, the concept of forgiveness is seductive, implying that there should be a common outcome to a variety of injuries, stemming from different situations and calling for different solutions. Every instance of what we call forgiveness can be seen to serve a different defensive function. While the conscious experience of what is called forgiveness is sometimes confused with the unconscious process of reparation, the two can only be described at different levels of psychic life. Despite the fact that in ,the unconscious' there is no such thing as forgiveness, the term has an adhesive quality in our thinking that also blunts the analyst''s appreciation of the aggressive components in the work. In a final vignette, the author illustrates an analytic outcome that has the appearance of forgiveness, but is best understood as the complex result of the everyday work of analysis. [source]